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John III the Terrible

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John III the Terrible
Ioan Vodă cel Cumplit
Prince of Moldavia
ReignFebruary 1572 – June 1574
PredecessorBogdan IV of Moldavia
SuccessorPeter the Lame
Born1521
Died14 June 1574
Roșcani [ro]
DynastyBogdan-Mușat
FatherStephen IV of Moldavia
MotherSerpega
ReligionOrthodox

John III the Terrible (Romanian: Ioan Vodă cel Cumplit), also John III the Brave (Romanian: Ioan cel Viteaz; 1521 – June 14, 1574) was Voivode of Moldavia between February 1572 and June 1574. Dimitrie Cantemir mentions him under the name John the Armenian.[1]

He was the grandson of Bogdan III and the son of Stephen IV and his Armenian mistress Serpega. It is said he spent part of his life being a merchant in Constantinople, where he had closely studied the Ottomans and their weaknesses.

Ioan was one of the last medieval Romanian rulers to battle the Ottoman Turks. His nickname "the Terrible" was a result of his harsh treatment of the Boyars, the Moldavian nobility, which at that time were very influential in deciding the rulers of the small principality. Attempting to strengthen his rule and make an example out of disloyal nobles, Ioan III carried out several Boyar executions, thus earning his alias "the Terrible". The common people appreciated his courageous stand against the nobility's corruption and the harsh Turkish domination. He refused to double the amount of tribute paid to the Ottomans but the Moldovan army was defeated in the Battle of Cahul Lake, he was captured and executed.[2]

His short reign was marked by fierce combat against the Ottoman Empire and their Crimean Tatar allies. In order to counter the power of the Ottomans, he allied himself with the Ukrainian Cossacks. He was victorious at the battles of Jiliște, the Siege of Brăila, Tighina and Cetatea Albă.[citation needed] When an army of 150,000 Turks[citation needed] was sent against him, he personally surrendered, being promised that his Moldavian soldiers and Cossack allies would be spared in exchange for his capture.[citation needed] He was killed by the Ottomans by tying his body to four camels, which were driven in different directions.[citation needed] His soldiers were nonetheless slaughtered mercilessly.[citation needed]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Димитрий КантемирОписание Молдавии. "Часть 2, глава XIV". Archived from the original on 2011-04-15.
  2. ^ Brezianu, Andrei; Spânu, Vlad (2010). The A to Z of Moldova. Plymouth: Scarecrow Press. pp. xxviii. ISBN 978-0-8108-7211-0. OCLC 526091516.
Preceded by Ruler of Moldavia
1572–1574
Succeeded by